Novelist Edna O’Brien Explores the True Nature of Evil
Celebrated for her books about love, the writer might finally win a Nobel Prize for something darker
The British author’s world—antic, subversive, wildly inventive and monstrously humane—returns to the screen in Steven Spielberg’s The BFG
Curiosity is a credential at Indiana University Library’s Lilly Library
Inventing the Beach: The Unnatural History of a Natural Place
The seashore used to be a scary place, then it became a place of respite and vacation. What happened?
Relive ‘Don Quixote’ With a Trip Through Miguel de Cervantes’ Spain
Tilt at windmills for the 400th anniversary of the author’s death
As U.S.-Cuba Relations Warm, This Long-Dead Author Benefits
A new conservation facility is on its way to Hemingway’s home near Havana
One Day Only: A Chance to View One Map to Rule Them All
A rare Tolkien-annotated map goes on display June 23
Vladimir Nabokov’s Butterfly Drawings Take Flight in This New Book
A little-known fact: The author of “Lolita” was also an avid lepidopterist
The Forgotten Dust Bowl Novel That Rivaled “The Grapes of Wrath”
Sanora Babb wrote about a family devastated by the Dust Bowl, but she lost her shot at stardom when John Steinbeck beat her to the punch
Build Your Own Library at the First-Ever Little Library Festival
The book-sharing stations have popped up all across the United States
Reprinted here for the first time, the article was published five years before Truman Capote’s best-selling book
Biographer Uncovers Unsigned Feature Article by Harper Lee
The ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ author published a profile of a Kansas investigator in an FBI magazine while helping Truman Capote research ‘In Cold Blood’
For the First Time, See Two Early Medieval Books Written By Women On Display Together
The manuscripts detail the authors’ experiences
These Were 2015’s Most Challenged Books
This year’s list includes S&M, LGBT content…and the Bible.
Celebrate Beverly Cleary’s 100th Birthday With a Trip to Her Sculpture Garden
Ramona’s creator is even more timeless thanks to Portland’s tribute in bronze
Celebrate Shakespeare’s Legacy at Hamlet’s Castle
Rest, rest, perturbed spirit! A bed awaits at “Elsinore”
An AI-Written Novella Almost Won a Literary Prize
A short novel co-written by humans and AI passed the first round of a Japanese literary contest
Did Shakespeare Lose His Head?
Scans of the Bard’s grave reveal that robbers may have stolen his skull two centuries ago
Muggles Are Selling the Chair in Which ‘Harry Potter’ Was Created
The decorated dining room chair J.K. Rowling used to write her iconic novels is going on sale
Mr. Darcy’s Wet Shirt is Coming to the United States
It’s the costume that launched an entire generation of Jane Austen lovers
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